Sunday, January 01, 2023

Pair says politics won’t end 30-year friendship (Palm Beach Post)

Heartwarming story about two friends who don't let labels divide them.. 

Reminds me of the heartfelt personal message that Vice President Al Gore once wrote to the Lee Atwater, Republican apparatchik, handwritten on one of Mr. Gore's framed U.S. Senate campaign signs, on prominent rdisplay at Atwater's "Red Hot & Blue" BBQ restaurant near historic Annapolis, Maryland: "Don;t let politics stand in the way of good barbecue." 

Some of my best friends are Republicans.   They're people, too. 

Pray for them.

And as Tiny Tim said in Dickens' A Christmas Carol, "God bless us everyone.!"

Merry Christmas!

Happy Hanukah!

Happy Solstice!

From Palm Beach Post: 

Pair says politics won’t end 30-year friendship 

Acceptance of differing viewpoints seems rare

Antonio Fins

Palm Beach Post | USA TODAY NETWORK

Ann Brown and Nancy Hart say their friendship of three decades has survived a growing political chasm for one reason: mutual respect.

Brown, an ardent Democrat, and Hart, an equally steadfast Republican, say they emphasize their nonpolitical commonalities, especially philanthropy and community service. But more than anything, the two simply say they “treasure” their friendship too much to let politics get between them.

“She is very, very active in good works and I support that and she supports me,” Brown said of Hart.

“And you know what, we discuss, we talk and we agree to disagree,” Hartadded.

The ability to discuss, and accept, a differing political point of view seems increasingly a rarity across America, and a flashpoint frequently severing bonds between families and friends. This year, the country, and Florida, endured another bruising, and caustic, election season that has once again tested the limits of partisan tolerance.

See FRIENDS, Page 22A



Friends 

Continued from Page 1A

A Pew Research Center poll released ahead of the November midterm vote showed that the rank-and-file within both major parties don’t just see rival political ideologies in a “negative light” but the people espousing them as well.

“Growing shares of both Republicans and Democrats say members of the other party are more immoral, dishonest, closed-minded than other Americans,” Pew’s poll concluded. And they do so by ample margins registering from 60% to 80%, the survey showed.

The friction is likely to add heartburn to holiday dinners as families and friends gather again, perhaps for the first time since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, for the year-end holidays, including Hanukkah, Christmas, Kwanzaa and New Year’s.

Brown and Hart, who both live in Palm Beach Gardens, say they, too, could easily fall into the partisan abyss but their friendship and loyalty means too much to them.

Besides their lunches and shared past, they are bonded in support for each other’s community causes. Brown, who still spends half the year or so living in Washington, D.C., is active in helping the Lord’s Place, Palm Beach Dramaworks and B’nai B’rith.

Hart, who moved to Palm Beach County as a fulltime resident from Vermont in 1992 with her husband, backs the Dreyfoos School of the Arts and the Melanoma Foundation as well as the nonpartisan American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

But both are clear they don’t steer away from or avoid “taboo” political discussions about abortion, immigration or presidential politics. No, they say they go head to head, no holds barred.

“We agree on nothing,” said Brown, who was appointed by President Bill Clinton to serve as chair of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

“I love her every minute. I listen to her with respect for her opinion and she listens to me. But we are on different sides of the political spectrum. It’s as simple as that, and it has not in any way ruined our friendship. In fact, we have our lunches together and it makes us closer.”

Hart, who has supported former President Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis, agreed.

“It makes me think and I do like to think,” Hart added. “I haven’t changed my mind really very much, but at least I understand where she’s coming from. She explains her beliefs. It’s not just, ‘I believe this without any reasoning behind it.’ She has reasons and that helps me to understand where she’s coming from and I respect that.”

Not only do they respect each other, they’ve also defended each other against rudeness from within their own political ranks.

Hart shares what she calls a telling anecdote from a gathering the two attended during the late 2000s. During a question-and-answer session with a Florida state representative, Hart said she inquired how the Democratic lawmaker planned to pay for a program they were touting.

“I raised my hand and I said, ‘And how do you propose to pay for this?’ ” Hart said. “And her answer to me was, ‘Who let that woman in this room?’ ” Hart said she was shocked, but Brown quickly came to her defense in chastising the lawmaker by reminding her the group was nonpartisan and Hart’s question was a legitimate area of discussion. “Ann stood up for me right then and there,” Hart recalls.

“What I did was I didn’t worry about who was Republican or Democrat,” Brown recalled. “I stood up for my friend. And I think that is where friendship supersedes everything.”

Because, Brown added, it all comes down to their mutual admiration and appreciation. “You can see respect is the key word here,” she said. “We respect each other.”

Brown said the friction over politics is due, perhaps, to people who have lost perspective.

“Really, it’s friendship over all else. When you have a good friend or a relative who is close, you want to treasure it, and separate it,” said Brown, who just this year helped fundraise for Democrat Val Demings’ U.S. Senate campaign.

Brown said she has been engaged and involved in politics since her teenage years, so she understands the passion behind the partisanship.

“I am a passionate person politically. But my friendship with Nancy overrides that,” she said.

“She is more of a treasure to me. People must think about what the friendship means to them and ask why can’t they have both in their lives, politics and friendship.”

Hart nodded in agreement.

“The most important thing to me is to be able listen and to have the ability to talk,” she said.

Hart said she has been shunned by people because of partisan differences. There are erstwhile friends, she said, who “don’t talk to me anymore” after “stomping out” in a political disagreement.

“That’s not the way our system should work,” Hart said.

“We are a democratic republic. We should listen to each other. We can agree. We can disagree.”

That’s how it is with Brown, she said. “We say, ‘OK, I understand what you’re thinking’ ... and we move on,” Hart said. “And now what are we going to order for dinner?”

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

A Republican maybe. However Trump supporters don't qualify as Republicans. They are fascists who wear a mark of shame until death. Only renouncing Orange Hitler and admitting their grievous error in judgement will redeem them one iota.

Anonymous said...

Donald Trump wanted to create a fascist kleptocracy where money would only flow upwards to him and people like him. His vision for America was similar to what we see in Russia today. All his phoney nationalist propaganda was just part of his grift. People are only cardboard cutouts to Donald Trump. Just look at how he shamelessly grifted his stupid supporters to a husk towards the end of his presidency using the phoney "Stop the Steal" scam. He knew he was politically impotent and radioactive waste but took people's money anyway.